U.S. Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan, joined by her family and agent, answers questions from the press outside her parents Stoneham, Massachusetts home 14 January 1994. Three men have been arrested in connection with the attack on Kerrigan which kept her from competing at the National championship. (CHRIS CHRISTO via Getty Images)

Figure skater Tonya Harding waves to cameramen through her car window 15 January 1994 as she and ex-husband Jeff Gillooly drive up to her rural cabin. Harding said she couldn't comment on reports that she is officially under investigation for the 06 January attack on skating rival Nancy Kerrigan. (CHRIS WILKINS via Getty Images)

"We had just seen this documentary and then we would go out and everyone is talking about things that eh, that I [thought] I have nothing to add to this conversation," Harkins told PIX11 News. "I'd rather talk about something that happened 20 years ago that I have a lot of facts about because I just saw this great documentary last night."

The new space in Olen and Harkin's apartment now provides a meeting area, Harkin said, where Tonya and Nancy fans can continue to have that same conversation over and over again.

Each artifact in the tight but well-thought out hallway/museum tells a part of the story that rocked the 1994 Olympics with each ice skating diva getting her own wall.

The museum itself relied heavily on donations and whatever the duo uncovered on Ebay.

The big question is – will Nancy or Tonya be visiting the make-shift museum anytime soon?

"We did an interview with the Boston Herald and they reached out to Nancy and the official word was 'no comment,'" Harkin revealed.

However, Harding's camp did confirm that the former ice skater thought the museum was "cool."

"Tonya does think its cool but she's too busy to come and visit – but we are fine with that.